Baidu, Alibaba Signs of China’s Dot-Com Boom
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

In the last year of the 1990s, hysteria over Internet companies that later disappointed investors reached a fever pitch. Are we seeing the beginnings of a similar phenomenon in China?
China’s dot-com boom is in its infancy, whereas 1999 marked the beginning of the end of America’s. Yet with Yahoo agreeing to pay $1 billion in cash for a 40% stake in Alibaba.com, it’s hard not to wonder if Internet mania is under way in Asia’s no. 2 economy.
China’s biggest online retailer isn’t considered a corporate basket case. The question is whether Yahoo, seduced by a potential market of 1.3 billion people, is overpaying for a piece of the Hong Kong-based company.
The $1 billion figure seems like a huge amount for less than half of an e-commerce outfit with 2,300 employees that reported sales of $46 million last year. The investment is easily the biggest by an overseas company in China’s Internet industry. It certainly won’t be the last.
The deal came after shares of Baidu.com soared almost fivefold in its August 5 initial public offering, the biggest IPO debut in more than five years. The Beijing-based owner of a popular Web search engine instantly became the most valuable technology company in China, with a market capitalization of almost $5 billion. The IPO caught the attention of investors the world over.
It’s easy to understand the allure. China holds tremendous promise, considering that less than 10% of the nation has Internet access. At the moment, China has 100 million Web users, half the number of America.
That’s why Amazon, eBay, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo are clamoring for Chinese partners. But should investors be so quick to own shares in Chinese dot-coms? Haven’t we seen that such IPOs can be the financial world’s equivalent of fool’s gold?
Maybe China will prove the skeptics wrong. Executives and investors searching for the next big thing are mesmerized by the nation’s growth. The Chinese economy expanded 9.5% in the second quarter, and retail sales rose 12.7% to a four-month high in July. Retail sales increased 12.9 in June.
The premier of China, Wen Jiabao, is counting on consumer spending and exports to sustain growth at the 8.6% annual rate of the last decade as he steers the economy away from its dependence on investment. The focus is on developing a thriving domestic market driven by household consumption.
Profiting from that growth is what Yahoo has in mind with its Alibaba.com investment.
All this is contributing to an environment where investors are ignoring Alibaba.com’s tiny revenue and eyeing its 14 million users. This is what got so many investors in trouble in the 1990s: ignoring concrete measures such as revenue in favor of squishy numbers like “clicks” or “unique visitors” to a Web site. Old-economy business realities took a back seat to hype.
Any number of risks might complicate Yahoo’s plans.
For one thing, Internet censorship regulations by the Chinese government can be unpredictable. For another, China’s market for online advertising is immature at best. And there is the question of the Chinese consumers’ willingness to pay for Web services.
Do China’s already shaky stock markets really want to attract the same breed of investor who bet on Boo.com, Globe.com, and Pets.com, companies that went bust once the frenzy passed?
For years now, a gold-rush mentality has pervaded boardrooms of multinational companies. So excited are executives about cheap labor that they’re willing to look past the warts. China’s banking system is awash in hundreds of billions of dollars of bad loans, and social unrest could boil over as the gap between rich and poor widens. Analysts also worry that China’s economy may overheat.
China itself almost seems like the economic equivalent of the dot-com boom of the 1990s. It’s thought to be run by omnipotent geniuses who can do little wrong. It’s Asia’s New Economy, its potential is boundless, and anyone who doesn’t see that is either a fool or a dinosaur.
All this leaves the Communist Party with the burden of achieving goals that are both unprecedented and seemingly at odds with one another: Creating hundreds of millions of jobs to maintain social stability while cooling growth to avoid inflation. It needs to accomplish both feats without traditional tools like short-term interest rates, which have little influence over China’s economy.
None of this means Yahoo’s Alibaba.com investment won’t pay off. The company already has proven its mettle in Japan, where it established itself as an important Internet power. And given China’s vast potential, not investing there would be a risk in itself.
It’s imperative that investors remember the lessons of the dot-com boom and bust in America and apply them to China. At the moment, it’s not clear that they are.
Mr. Pesek is a columnist with Bloomberg News.